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	<title>Comments on: Trafigura: the ugly abuse of corporate power</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.michaelmeacher.info/weblog/2009/09/trafigura-the-ugly-abuse-of-corporate-power/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.michaelmeacher.info/weblog/2009/09/trafigura-the-ugly-abuse-of-corporate-power/</link>
	<description>Labour MP for Oldham West and Royton</description>
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		<title>By: Richard Bramhall</title>
		<link>http://www.michaelmeacher.info/weblog/2009/09/trafigura-the-ugly-abuse-of-corporate-power/comment-page-1/#comment-163</link>
		<dc:creator>Richard Bramhall</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 20 Sep 2009 13:32:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.michaelmeacher.info/weblog/?p=432#comment-163</guid>
		<description>You propose sanctions. Quite right. But confidence in such an idea oozes away if we draw parallels between what you suggest for poisoned-oil spillers and what might be done to nuclear polluters.
&lt;p&gt;
In the UK our own Environment Agency is completely in cahoots with the Health Protection Agency, having no expertise to test whether HPA&#039;s advice conforms with &quot;sound science&quot; (EA is legally bound to ensure that they use sound science). And when the EA&#039;s noses are rubbed in elementary mistakes the HPA has made they say &lt;i&gt;We regard ourselves as an intelligent client and we&#039;re satisfied with HPA&quot;&lt;/i&gt;.
&lt;p&gt;
UNEP&#039;s investigations into contamination from Uranium-based weapons in the Balkans and the Lebanon have been a sick joke - wrong methods, wrong equipment, wrong assumptions.
&lt;p&gt;
So if those are any kind of precedent  I wonder why we should think an International Environment Agency would serve the interests of truth any better. Presumably it would operate under the UN banner. In that case would it be like the UN&#039;s World Health Organisation?  Since 1959 WHO has been subject to an agreement with the UN&#039;s pro-nuclear International Atomic Energy Agency which gives IAEA power to stop WHO looking into radiation and health. (IAEA don&#039;t actually need to exercise this veto because, like all UN agencies, the culture of WHO is thoroughly pro-nuclear.)
&lt;p&gt;
The &lt;i&gt;International&lt;/i&gt; label is no guarantee of probity or effectiveness. After all, the source of the HPA&#039;s radiological advice is the &lt;b&gt;International&lt;/b&gt; Commission on Radiological Protection who, in defending their flawed risk model, have never admitted any evidence of health effects after Chernobyl, thus robbing the human race of the best and greatest chance it has ever had to examine the consequences of exposing populations to radioactive pollution. They never cite any evidence they don&#039;t agree with.
&lt;p&gt;
We can look at one example of this global nuclear mindset in action. It&#039;s parochial but precedent setting. HPA have recently been in Northamptonshire, acting as paid consultants to Augean - operators who are applying for Environment Agency authorisation to dump radioactive waste in a poorly engineered landfill where no off-site monitoring is planned. The EA has been down there too, I hear, echoing HPA&#039;s reassuring twaddle about doses to the public being so low that they have nothing to worry about. All based on an out-of-date risk model whose credibility was blown apart by the conclusions of the Committee Examining Radiation Risks of Internal Emitters, which you set up and which reported in 2004 that the concept of &quot;dose&quot; is meaningless for the kinds of exposure routinely foisted on us by the nuclear industry and the military.
&lt;p&gt;
I said this Augean application was precedent setting. The rush is on to get rid of wastes from decommissioning old nuclear sites so as to make way for new nuclear build. Augean will hope to benefit from the fact that HPA mishandled its own consultation on radiological criteria for on-land disposals; HPA was given strong evidence of the effects of Uranium but threw it out and closed down the dialogue.
&lt;p&gt;Phew! Fortunately, as you point out, the Courts may come to our aid. The grief is already being felt in the US, where an oil company which contaminated land with radioactivity from old pipe-work has had to pay $870 million to a single landowner. Oil workers who were exposed while scrapping the pipes and subsequently got cancer and leukaemia have won a string of multi-million dollar settlements. Sulphur is not the only nasty in oil.
&lt;p&gt;
And in the UK a few days ago, a Court found Uranium weapons used by Britain and the US in the 1991 Gulf War guilty of causing the death of Lance Corporal Stuart Dyson. Cases like these are being decided on the invalidity of the ICRP risk model. &lt;p&gt;
All are agreed that polluters like Augean will be liable. The vast asbestos bankruptcies of the last few years will look like a vicarage tea-party. Personal injury lawyers, start queuing here, please. I hope you will begin by obtaining justice for Stuart Dyson&#039;s family; they saw a healthy young man fade away for 18 years after his service in the Gulf and die at the age of 39.
&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
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		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You propose sanctions. Quite right. But confidence in such an idea oozes away if we draw parallels between what you suggest for poisoned-oil spillers and what might be done to nuclear polluters.</p>
<p>
In the UK our own Environment Agency is completely in cahoots with the Health Protection Agency, having no expertise to test whether HPA&#8217;s advice conforms with &#8220;sound science&#8221; (EA is legally bound to ensure that they use sound science). And when the EA&#8217;s noses are rubbed in elementary mistakes the HPA has made they say <i>We regard ourselves as an intelligent client and we&#8217;re satisfied with HPA&#8221;</i>.
</p>
<p>
UNEP&#8217;s investigations into contamination from Uranium-based weapons in the Balkans and the Lebanon have been a sick joke &#8211; wrong methods, wrong equipment, wrong assumptions.
</p>
<p>
So if those are any kind of precedent  I wonder why we should think an International Environment Agency would serve the interests of truth any better. Presumably it would operate under the UN banner. In that case would it be like the UN&#8217;s World Health Organisation?  Since 1959 WHO has been subject to an agreement with the UN&#8217;s pro-nuclear International Atomic Energy Agency which gives IAEA power to stop WHO looking into radiation and health. (IAEA don&#8217;t actually need to exercise this veto because, like all UN agencies, the culture of WHO is thoroughly pro-nuclear.)
</p>
<p>
The <i>International</i> label is no guarantee of probity or effectiveness. After all, the source of the HPA&#8217;s radiological advice is the <b>International</b> Commission on Radiological Protection who, in defending their flawed risk model, have never admitted any evidence of health effects after Chernobyl, thus robbing the human race of the best and greatest chance it has ever had to examine the consequences of exposing populations to radioactive pollution. They never cite any evidence they don&#8217;t agree with.
</p>
<p>
We can look at one example of this global nuclear mindset in action. It&#8217;s parochial but precedent setting. HPA have recently been in Northamptonshire, acting as paid consultants to Augean &#8211; operators who are applying for Environment Agency authorisation to dump radioactive waste in a poorly engineered landfill where no off-site monitoring is planned. The EA has been down there too, I hear, echoing HPA&#8217;s reassuring twaddle about doses to the public being so low that they have nothing to worry about. All based on an out-of-date risk model whose credibility was blown apart by the conclusions of the Committee Examining Radiation Risks of Internal Emitters, which you set up and which reported in 2004 that the concept of &#8220;dose&#8221; is meaningless for the kinds of exposure routinely foisted on us by the nuclear industry and the military.
</p>
<p>
I said this Augean application was precedent setting. The rush is on to get rid of wastes from decommissioning old nuclear sites so as to make way for new nuclear build. Augean will hope to benefit from the fact that HPA mishandled its own consultation on radiological criteria for on-land disposals; HPA was given strong evidence of the effects of Uranium but threw it out and closed down the dialogue.
</p>
<p>Phew! Fortunately, as you point out, the Courts may come to our aid. The grief is already being felt in the US, where an oil company which contaminated land with radioactivity from old pipe-work has had to pay $870 million to a single landowner. Oil workers who were exposed while scrapping the pipes and subsequently got cancer and leukaemia have won a string of multi-million dollar settlements. Sulphur is not the only nasty in oil.
</p>
<p>
And in the UK a few days ago, a Court found Uranium weapons used by Britain and the US in the 1991 Gulf War guilty of causing the death of Lance Corporal Stuart Dyson. Cases like these are being decided on the invalidity of the ICRP risk model. </p>
<p>
All are agreed that polluters like Augean will be liable. The vast asbestos bankruptcies of the last few years will look like a vicarage tea-party. Personal injury lawyers, start queuing here, please. I hope you will begin by obtaining justice for Stuart Dyson&#8217;s family; they saw a healthy young man fade away for 18 years after his service in the Gulf and die at the age of 39.</p>
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